Think of how many rats, rabbits and mice those badgers eat and their economic value is suddenly higher than what would be saved by the paltry 17% TB reduction I've heard about.
The idea that culling is ineffective is disproved by the Ireland figures - they continued to cull and the incidence of bovine TB has fallen - UK stopped culling and bovine TB has risen several fold. All other TB in my activities are the same. These facts are cited with supporting evidence in my earlier posts.
Here is a question - if bovine TB is not transmitted to humans, why test and destroy infected animals at all?
With respect Red, I agree overall the trend in countries allowing open control of badger numbers do on average seem to have a decrease in TB cases, but that doesn't mean without doubt a badger cull is the answer. For example the numbers for NI and RoI are an ideal example, why have the cases of TB not increases by the same extent as in the SW of England? I would argue these numbers are not at all significant because the change is so small, cases may have risen from 0.4 - 0.5% (which are small numbers compared with the SW) but that is still below the 1998 0.55% value in RoI when control had been happening for many years.
Another visual area of concern as a scientist is the UK graphic of TB cases on the BBC website:
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Clearly the cases of TB do not map effectively onto badger populations? If badgers are the primary infection pathway then I would expect much better correlation between cases of TB and badger populations?
I am not for, or against a cull, and I agree there is evidence for both cases which suggests to me the only course of action is the government to fund more research, something that should have been done years ago, to find the right solution with out guessing. What I do think is badger numbers prove they do not require the high level of protection they currently receive, just like dear they are fantastic to watch but their numbers must be managed to limit the damage that can be caused.
I am not pro cull - I'm anti stupid arbitary rules about slaughtering cattle that can recover and pose no risk to human health. However culling does work - our figures individually and compared to other countries proves that beyond doubt. Whether we should do it is another matter - but if we want local food and food independence then we cannot simply say "stop the cull and hang the consequences". Bovine TB is rising exponentially. It costs us all more every year and more farmers give up each year. Its absurdly narrow minded to ignore it - we need a complete solution - not an emotional reaction (not pointing that at any individual here - but going "don't kill badgers" without adressing the broader issue is naive).
Red
What is the argument for not inoculating the cows?
Current Vaccines not fully effective,
but also that any cow vaccinated will show a positive reaction to the skin-test, and under EU guidlines MUST be destroyed....
As a layman, it certainly seems that way! THe skin test apparently tests for TB antibodies, not the existence of active TB. So you have to destroy any animal vaccinated, and also kill off healthy animals with natural immunity..................................
Current Vaccines not fully effective, but also that any cow vaccinated will show a positive reaction to the skin-test, and under EU guidlines MUST be destroyed....
With respect Red, I agree overall the trend in countries allowing open control of badger numbers do on average seem to have a decrease in TB cases, but that doesn't mean without doubt a badger cull is the answer. For example the numbers for NI and RoI are an ideal example, why have the cases of TB not increases by the same extent as in the SW of England? I would argue these numbers are not at all significant because the change is so small, cases may have risen from 0.4 - 0.5% (which are small numbers compared with the SW) but that is still below the 1998 0.55% value in RoI when control had been happening for many years.
Another visual area of concern as a scientist is the UK graphic of TB cases on the BBC website:
Clearly the cases of TB do not map effectively onto badger populations? If badgers are the primary infection pathway then I would expect much better correlation between cases of TB and badger populations?
I am not for, or against a cull, and I agree there is evidence for both cases which suggests to me the only course of action is the government to fund more research, something that should have been done years ago, to find the right solution with out guessing. What I do think is badger numbers prove they do not require the high level of protection they currently receive, just like dear they are fantastic to watch but their numbers must be managed to limit the damage that can be caused.